The PLATEMAN'S FORGED PLATE GALLERY

As a Police Officer on Freeway Patrol I come across some funny illegal
plates. In British Columbia vehicles must be both be registered and
insured through the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia
(I.C.B.C.). Currently the cost of full annual insurance with a 40%
safe drivers discount is around $1,000.00. The proof of insurance is
provided through the serialised decal and supporting insurance
documents. As always there are those people who want to circumvent
the inconvenience of shelling out big money by stealing a plate or
decal, altering a decal, or manufacturing their own. Below are some
prime examples of manufactured and altered decals.

This 1996 decal was computer manufactured, printed on a laser printer,
and then laminated. Because it was so easy to manufacture these black
on white decals I.C.B.C. changed mid year to a pink on white decal.

This decal was manufactured by exquisitely cutting out pieces of blue
reflective plastic and painstakingly arranging them onto the plate.
Unable to produce the minutely small serial numbers and "British
Columbia" they artiste fudged around this area. The reflective
qualities of the plate shone through the bare areas of the decal giving
it a genuine appearance.

A sloppy job of painting over a 1997 GRN on WHI decal to make it a
BLU on WHI 1999 decal. The paint is too dense and doesn't reflect at
night.

A computer generated and colour bubble jet printed 1998 RED on WHI
decal. The colours are off a little and the manufacturer didn't centre
the two lines of British Columbia.

How do you turn a red 1998 decal into a blue 1999 decal? Easy you get some cheap
blue paint and slop away...very convincing.

This is perhaps my favourite amateur forgery. My attention was
immediately drawn to a beater of a van. The temporary permit was
affixed to the back window with Band Aids, and the expiry date was
crudely changed with a blue ball point pen. This driver received about
$1,000 in fines, a 30 day vehicle impound, seven days in jail, and a
six month driving suspension.

Ontario decals show even years on the right side of the decal and odd
years on the left side of the decal. One bright spark decided to change
his 1996 decal into a 1999 decal by clipping out the number 6 and
inverting it into a nine. Too bad he didn't place the odd year on
the other side of the decal though.

He did a little better, though, when he manufactured stickers for his
registration on his home computer.

This plate looked good from a distance,

but it didn't fool the onboard computer that said the plate had expired in June.
The first Albertan I've ever stopped who had tampered with his plate. He made
some papier-mache, designed it into a DEC, painted it blue and covered it with
silicone gel to make it waterproof. A good effort to save the $54 plate fee,
but it ended up costing him $800 in fines, a $70 tow bill, and loss of a plate.

The funniest one ever. Unfortunately I wasn't the officer who stopped this miscreant
with a poorly designed home made B.C. plate.

My first forged motorcycle decal

an authentic decal scanned into a computer and reproduced quite well on a printer.